Hello @Anonymous something to remember, most people that run large companies were brought up on AutoCAD so be careful about calling it old and clunky in an interview.
Even if its an Inventor job and they don't seem to use it, they probably have a sweet spot for it and how it got them to where they are today.
Don't want to lose a big opportunity because you inadvertently disparaged something they used for 20 years and they are reminded how they're being left behind by young and speedy folks like you. It is still relevant, powerful, and evolving, but without it, Inventor would have never existed. This is also an analogy of how they feel so just be aware or better yet acknowledge and have something to talk about.
Most forward thinking companies want to move to a 3D environment but are hesitant to change for a variety of reasons depending on their needs.
Knowing the lingo and how to interact with legacy data is critical. Becoming proficient with their current method and moving them over to Inventor will make you indispensable.
Story time:
I started with R13 and worked a number of crazy jobs and studied architecture and design at Arizona State.
After graduation an aerospace engineering job that I thought was way out of my league was hiring and it said AutoCAD so I just applied.
When I showed them my architecture plan drawings they hired me on the spot and started the next day.
I sat down at my desk and they plopped an Inventor book on my lap and said we're moving to 3D, learn how to use this, it's called Inventor.
Moral of the story, never judge a job posting by its description.
Are they making you learn manual drafting anymore? Probably not in engineering classes, but what are you taking that has AutoCAD?
It may seem old and clunky to you, but for me going from pencil to computer was a lot more than 4x faster I can assure you.
Hope that helps!
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